Cao Fei wins the Deutsche Börse Prize for her solo exhibition "Blueprints" in UK

TEXT:CAFA ART INFO    DATE: 2021.9.10

Cao Fei Asia One, 2018 ? Cao Fei Courtesy of artist, Vitamin Creative Space and Spru?th Magers 03.jpg

Cao Fei, Asia One, 2018 ? Cao Fei Courtesy of artist, Vitamin Creative Space and Spru?th Magers

Cao Fei was awarded the Deutsche B?rse Photography Foundation Prize 2021 for her first large-scale UK solo exhibition, Blueprints (2020), at the Serpentine Gallery, London (4 March – 17 May 2020 and 4 August – 13 September 2020). She was announced to win the prestigious £30,000 prize by the British broadcaster, journalist and filmmaker, Bidishaat, a special ceremony at The Photographers’ Gallery, London on 9 September 2021. 

Cao Fei (b. 1978, Guangzhou), is one of the most innovative and exciting young Chinese artists to have emerged on the international scene. Working across film, photography, digital media, sculpture and installation, Cao Fei’s longstanding interest in virtual possibilities is underpinned by her own experience of, and extensive research into, China’s historical, political and social structures.  From early in her practice, Cao Fei harnessed the digital world as both a utopian and dystopian space, with little distinction between virtual and analogue experience. 

Cao Fei Nova, 2019 ? Cao Fei Courtesy of artist, Vitamin Creative Space and Sprüth Magers.jpg

Cao Fei Nova, 2019 ? Cao Fei Courtesy of artist, Vitamin Creative Space and Sprüth Magers 02.jpgCao Fei, Nova, 2019 ? Cao Fei Courtesy of artist, Vitamin Creative Space and Sprüth Magers

With an immersive, site-specific presentation, her solo exhibition Blueprints brought together new and existing works, including Whose Utopia? (2006), Asia One (2018) and La Town (2014) exploring the impact of technology, virtual realities, urbanisation and the alienating effects of mechanised labour on individuals and communities. Shown in an environment that blurred the boundaries of virtual, physical and cinematic spaces, Blueprints offered visitors multiple frames of experience through precisely crafted, visually lush narratives and propositions informed by a rich resource of references. 

Cao Fei Asia One, 2018 ? Cao Fei Courtesy of artist, Vitamin Creative Space and Spru?th Magers 02.jpg

Cao Fei Asia One, 2018 ? Cao Fei Courtesy of artist, Vitamin Creative Space and Spru?th Magers.jpg

Cao Fei, Asia One, 2018 ? Cao Fei Courtesy of artist, Vitamin Creative Space and Spru?th Magers

The Deutsche B?rse Photography Foundation Prize 2021, which also marks the 25th anniversary of this long-standing and prestigious annual prize, recognises artists and projects deemed to have made the most innovative and significant contribution to photography over the previous 12 months. Over the last 25 years, this leading Photography Prize has honoured ground-breaking artists from across the world, drawing attention to the diverse manifestations and innovative developments of contemporary photography. In showcasing four finalist and one winner each year, the prize has enabled remarkable artist work to be recognised and rewarded within the field, and by the wider public, while capturing, reflecting upon and questioning the changing context of the medium and its wider perception. 

The 2021 Deutsche B?rse Photography Foundation Prize jury comprised: Cristina de Middel, artist; Simon Njami, independent curator, writer, lecturer and art critic; Anna Tellgren, curator of photography at Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Anne-Marie Beckmann, Director of the Deutsche Bo?rse Photography Foundation, Frankfurt; and Brett Rogers, Director of The Photographers’ Gallery as the non-voting chair. 

The work of all the 2021 shortlisted artists, Poulomi Basu, Alejandro Cartagena, Cao Fei and Zineb Sedira, remains on display at The Photographers’ Gallery, curated by Anna Dannemann, until 26 September 2021. The exhibition is also part of the international photography triennial RAY Fotografieprojekte Frankfurt/RheinMain and is on display at Deutsche B?rse’s headquarters in Eschborn/Frankfurt until 19 September 2021.

Courtesy The Photographers' Gallery.